(This originally appeared in the San Diego Troubadour. Used with kind permission). |
In my
mind there was a decades long-debate as to who the best rock and roll
poet was, Bob Dylan or Leonard Cohen. Being the kind of ersatz pundit
who argued passionately for the minority opinion, my champion was Cohen.
Critics and audiences and what used to be called Mass Media reached a
consensus that gave Dylan the Keys to the Kingdom. All is to say that
Dylan has Tin Pan Alley throwing a large shadow over his work. And now,
with the death of the Canadian-born poet, novelist songwriter and
recording artist on November 10 at age 82 gives the lie to the nonsense
of pitting the two songwriters against each other in hypothetical grudge
matches; that was the stuff of high school bull sessions, teen age
certainty at its most insufferable. Ironically, Cohen’s music was about
growing up and, eventually, growing old, if not with grace but certainly
with full intent of living fully to the last. This was the rare
instance where his work became more profound as I aged, deeper, more
nuanced as personal experience matched the literary craft of the songs I
admired long and enviously.
His
songs were an impetus for me to do the same as he, a callow seventeen
impatient, in some sense , to grow up and experience heartbreak so that I
might wallow in a notion that mine, too, was a life lived fully, if not
well, as Cohen seemed to convey in his lyrics. Dark rooms full of
teenagers , a thick odor of pot and incense , Leonard Cohen’s voice, a
rumbling monotone that made you think of a man speaking low or softly
who had just then raised his volume just enough so that you suddenly
heard him speak with alarming clarity of phrase and image, a constant,
three chord strum on a guitar, this was my first encounter with the
songwriter, an artist that planted the seed in many of us to go into the
world and experience it deeply, to contemplate those experiences
closely and completely, and to write the inexpressible in terms of the
unforgettable. How many of us actually did anything remotely like that
is unknown; jobs, marriages, wars have serious ways of side tracking or
eliminating careers as poets. But Cohen managed it, in a career that
began in 1956 with the publication of his first book, The Spice Box Of Earth.
The
sacred and the profane were subjects that were constants in his
writing, not so much mashed together, the arbitrary fusion of unlike
propositions , but rather intermingling, the aspects of sensuality and
solemnity weaving and through each other, elements of the human spirit’s
need to experience feel fully alive. Cohen’s chronicle of how he
followed his muse over decades, in songs, poems, novels reveals a man
who , I think, obviously believed in God, a deity, though, who might
possible not have a Grand Plan for good people after this life
surrenders us to darkness. His Higher Power, though, has a subtle and
power sense of Irony. If God is in the details, He is in laughing,
smirking at least, wondering what is we might learn from the collected
experiences a life time accords us.
What
inspired the poet in me to come alive and chase the muse of learning
how to create suggestive sentences was the expansive flashiness of
Dylan’s writing, vernacular fireworks that, in their best expression,
made no literal sense but still left you with the chilling effect that
something was happening that needed a new language to describe the vibe.
His songs were public, his lyrics were cast in broad swaths of angular,
cubist-bent non sequiturs that were perfect for a generation of youth
that vaguely wanted a destiny that would form as all utopias
theoretically would, by consensus, without rules, distortions, based on
cooperation, in harmony with a natural order that had gotten lost in the
rapid shuffle of change since World War 2. Cohen was the other extreme,
personal, isolated, reflective to the degree that you felt as though
you were invading a private space as you played the albums, the effect
of walking into a room you thought was empty only to discover someone in
there staring into a dark corner of the space, talking to themselves.
Cohen felt deeply, considered his affairs, his pilgrimages, and his
constant search for experience that might allow him to grow spiritually
and so uncover a more profound notion of a love that does not die.
In
poems and especially in songs, songs like “Suzanne”, “Hey , That’s No
Way to Say Goodbye”, “Hallelujah “, and “Tower of Song”, Cohen artfully
balanced two sides of a persona , the soul scarred and deepened by
profound happenstance, and the observer, who wittily and with enormous
amounts of bemusement recounting a new subtle lesson or a lesson that
needed to be learned yet again. This isn’t to say Cohen is
philosophically ponderous or didactic; although his songs are prone to
many stanzas, Cohen’s lines and images are crisp, ironic, a masterful
use of the snappy line no less agile than what Raymond Chandler’s
Marlowe would offer. “Tower of Song”, I think, gives full evidence of
this songwriter’s ability to be honest and curtly honestly with his
allegories and yet it keep it comical.
Well my friends are gone and my hair is grey
I ache in the places where I used to play
And I’m crazy for love but I’m not coming on
I’m just paying my rent every day
Oh in the Tower of Song
I said to Hank Williams: how lonely does it get?
Hank Williams hasn’t answered yet
But I hear him coughing all night long
A hundred floors above me
In the Tower of Song
I was born like this, I had no choice
I was born with the gift of a golden voice
And twenty-seven angels from the Great Beyond
They tied me to this table right here
In the Tower of Song
His
songs, which I fine the finest of the late 20th century in English–only
Dylan, Costello, Mitchell and Paul Simon, have comparable bodies of
work–we find more attention given to the effect of every word and phrase
that’s applied to his themes, his story lines. In many ways, Cohen was a
better writer over all. Unlike Dylan, who has been indiscriminate for
the last thirty ways I would say Cohen is a better lyricist than Dylan
because he’s a better years about the quality of work he’s released,
there is scarcely anything in Cohen’s songbook that wasn’t less than
considered, pondered over, measured for effect and the achievement of
the cultivated ambiguity that made you yearn for the sweet agony that
accompanies a permanent residence in the half lit zone between the
sacred and the profane.